Republican lawmakers are pushing abortion-restricting bills in both Indiana and Arkansas, suggesting the GOP did not learn from the national backlash to super aggressive abortion rhetoric in the 2012 elections. (See: Akin, Todd and Mourdock, Richard.)
Old habits, it seem, die hard.
On Thursday, the Republican-controlled House in Arkansas green-lighted a bill, 80-10, to prohibit abortions at 20 weeks into a pregnancy. And in a separate move, the state House approved a bill, 68-20, that would ban abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy if a fetal heartbeat is detected (with the exception of rape, incest and life of the mother).
If the latter bill passes, it would become one of the strictest abortion laws in this country.
Critics say the legislation, dubbed the “heartbeat bill,” would hurt women who don’t realize they are pregnant in time. But Republican Rep. Andy Mayberry, who spearheaded the bill, said on the House floor that it would protect “the most weak and innocent and vulnerable among us.”
Whether the bill becomes law is very much up in the air. Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe has expressed concerns about the constitutionality of both bills, but has not indicated if he’d sign off on them. Beebe previously told local news outlets that if the legislation reaches his desk “then to a large extent I’ll be guided by that.”
A tough abortion bill is also advancing in Indiana. Earlier this week, the state Senate passed a bill that would mandate that women undergo an ultrasound before and after taking an abortion-inducing drug. It would essentially require clinics to conduct the invasive and controversial transvaginal ultrasounds on women.









